While President Obama has been withdrawn from press scrutiny over his handling of Libya, he's managed to sit down to no less than six local TV interviews this month, with a view to a friendly format focused on issues of concern to his liberal base in swing states. Washington Post's Peter Wallsten has the story on today's print edition front page (emphases mine): Obama has made such encounters with local news stations a staple of his communications strategy. Since December, White House aides have handpicked 13 stations, all in key cities in presidential battleground states, to reward with the biggest “get” in the TV news business: a one-on-one White House interview with the president. An additional interview was granted to Hearst Television’s Washington bureau, which serves more than two dozen local stations across the country.
Continue reading …While President Obama has been withdrawn from press scrutiny over his handling of Libya, he's managed to sit down to no less than six local TV interviews this month, with a view to a friendly format focused on issues of concern to his liberal base in swing states. Washington Post's Peter Wallsten has the story on today's print edition front page (emphases mine): Obama has made such encounters with local news stations a staple of his communications strategy. Since December, White House aides have handpicked 13 stations, all in key cities in presidential battleground states, to reward with the biggest “get” in the TV news business: a one-on-one White House interview with the president. An additional interview was granted to Hearst Television’s Washington bureau, which serves more than two dozen local stations across the country.
Continue reading …While President Obama has been withdrawn from press scrutiny over his handling of Libya, he's managed to sit down to no less than six local TV interviews this month, with a view to a friendly format focused on issues of concern to his liberal base in swing states. Washington Post's Peter Wallsten has the story on today's print edition front page (emphases mine): Obama has made such encounters with local news stations a staple of his communications strategy. Since December, White House aides have handpicked 13 stations, all in key cities in presidential battleground states, to reward with the biggest “get” in the TV news business: a one-on-one White House interview with the president. An additional interview was granted to Hearst Television’s Washington bureau, which serves more than two dozen local stations across the country.
Continue reading …Thousands demonstrate in Deraa as frustration mounts at Bashir al-Assad’s failure to deliver reforms Security forces fired shots and used teargas to disperse up to 4,000 protesters in the volatile Syrian city of Deraa on Monday as frustration mounted at the slow pace of promised reforms. Despite the widespread presence of security forces, protesters appeared to consolidate their positions in Deraa in the deep south and in the northern port city of Latakia, which are the two main fronts in the challenge to the Syrian regime. According to human rights activists, more than 150 people have been killed in 11 days of unrest, which have seen protesters calling for increased freedoms. Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, who has not been sighted during the protests, is expected to deliver a speech within days. The government has pledged to lift an almost five decade old emergency law, which – among other things – severely limits citizens’ rights to demonstrate. That and other reforms are yet to be implemented. A witness said demonstrators in Deraa had converged on a main square chanting “no to emergency laws”. Speaking on Lebanese Hezbollah’s al-Manar television, the vice-president, Farouq al-Sharaa, a reform-minded member of the government from Deraa, said president Bashar al-Assad would announce decisions that will “please the people” in the next 48 hours. On Sunday, Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Ergdogan, said he had urged Assad to “listen to the voice of the people”, while US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said both parties in the US Congress believed Assad was a “reformer”. In the past few years, Turkey and Syria have enjoyed good relations, with Syria seeking Turkish support as a counterweight to US support for Israel. Syrian activists expressed anger at Clinton’s comments and a lack of trust that reforms would be introduced. The government has announced small reforms and pledges of bigger changes but so far no concrete proposals to enhance freedoms have been made. “There are so many conflicting messages,” said a civil rights activist in Damascus. “The government said there would not be violence any more and that there is a decision to lift emergency law, but they are still arresting so many people and blaming unrest on outside interference. They need to address the problems as they are and put solutions soon if they really want to rally unity.” Other activists said they did not believe any reforms would be made, while some claimed any reforms would not be enough. “Serious reforms won’t be made because they would involve sacrificing people in the narrow circle around Assad,” said Ziad Malki, a Syrian activist exiled in Switzerland. He pointed to Rami Makhlouf, the cousin of the president who has been a target of protesters’ ire over allegations that his interests have been acquired through corruption. “Bashar al-Assad could be a very nice person, but it doesn’t matter: we want a democratically elected president,” said Ausama Monajed, a Syrian activist in the UK who has been circulating a daily email of information on the continuing unrest. The differing views highlight the lack of clarity about the demands of the various protesters and activists. Political organising has been almost impossible in the country, causing many activists and opposition figures to go into exile. There is also confusion about those responsible for the deaths of protesters in Latakia on Friday and Saturday. The government claimed gangs carried out the violence but some activists said the gunmen were controlled by the government. Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …So Donald Trump wants to run for the Republican ticket, eh? He’s going to have some trouble explaining this away . CNN.com: November, 1999: Trump, a prospective candidate for the Reform Party presidential nomination, is proposing a onetime net worth tax on individuals and trusts worth 10 million or more. By Trumps calculations, his proposed 14.25 percent levy on such net worth would raise 5.7 trillion and wipe out the debt in one full swoop . — The net worth tax is the cornerstone of Trump’s economic plan released Tuesday morning. “No one has put forward a plan to make this country entirely debt free as we enter the next millenium,” Trump said in a written statement. “The plan I am proposing today does not involve smoke and mirrors, phony numbers, financial gimmicks, or the usual economic chicanery you usually find in DisneylandonthePotomac,” Trump said. Trump would exempt the value of an individual’s principal home from the net worth total. “By my calculations, 1 percent of Americans, who control 90 percent of the wealth in this country, would be affected by my plan ,” Trump said. “The other 99 percent of the people would get deep reductions in their federal income taxes,” he said. Eliminating the national debt would save the federal government 200 billion a year in interest payments, Trump said. He proposes to earmark half the savings for middle class tax cuts, and the other half for Social Security. Yeah, Trump is done. Newt’s got some big problems with flip-floppage . That leaves Mittens, Palin, Bachmann, and TPaw. Oh, and Boss Hawg Barbour. It’s going to be a very interesting Republican primary season.
Continue reading …Uncertainty over upheaval in Middle East prompts deputy prime minister to head delegation of businesses and universities Nick Clegg is to push for stronger ties with Latin America as officials said events in the Middle East have made the region an unpredictable partner for the UK. The deputy prime minister will lead a delegation of British businessmen and the vice-chancellors of six universities to Mexico as he seeks to win international business for the UK’s university sector. Mexico is the world’s 14th largest economy but officials believe it will move up to seventh place before the end of the decade. Clegg is this week taking the lead in what has been described by officials as a “year-long charm offensive” and is visiting Mexico where he will address the country’s senate in Spanish. Diplomats said he will be the first UK politician to address the senate, despite not being a head of state, and will meet Mexican president Felipe Calderón. Clegg will extol the virtues of UK industries to Latin America and will promote the UK’s education sector, the funding of which dented his standing so badly when he went back on a pre-election promise not to raise university fees. The government believes its education industry is a British success story and hopes to promote it as one that should set up satellite operations abroad in countries such as Mexico. Clegg will be accompanied by the vice-chancellor of the university in his Sheffield constituency, as well as ones from Aberdeen, Strathclyde and Southampton. The universities minister, David Willetts, and foreign office minister, Jeremy Browne, will also go on the trip. Clegg leaves the UK for Latin America after his last attempt at making the trip was cancelled to enable him to stay and vote through the government’s plans for a referendum on the alternative vote. Foreign office officials have been trying to get him to go abroad, saying there is international interest in the coalition that was formed in the UK last May. There is also a debate within the Foreign Office over the strategic direction the UK should take in the light of the uprisings in the Middle East, with question marks raised about whether Britain can continue to rely on the region for trade. An official from the government’s trade promotion body, UK Trade & Investment, said: “One or two of our traditional markets are proving a tad more difficult so if we could get more from Latin America, [that would help].”This year William Hague will open more embassies in Latin America, and there will be an emphasis on “political economy” as the UK seeks to capitalise on its standing in Mexico where officials say it is respected for its role in international affairs. Mexico is said to have looked to the UK for diplomatic guidance during the negotiations surrounding the situation in Libya, as well as have an interest in how British politics works. Mexican politicians regularly watch prime minister’s questions. Writing in Mexican daily newspaper, Reforma, Clegg said: “Mexico and the UK are open societies. That is why I am here, leading a delegation of UK government ministers and top businesspeople to Mexico City. Ours are like-minded nations: plural, democratic and internationalist in spirit. We recognise that, in an increasingly interconnected world, our prosperity and security depend ever more on one another. And, in that world, such an affinity is not to be squandered.” Clegg will say it is odd that while there were deep bilateral relationships in the 19th century, when the UK helped Mexico build its infrastructure, now the UK and Mexico don’t trade intensively – the UK is the fifth-largest trading nation in the world while Mexico is the “trade star” of Latin America. “The World Bank has declared Mexico the easiest Latin American nation within which to do business. In Europe, the OECD has said the same about the UK. Yet the UK makes up less than 1% of Mexico’s imports. We have allowed ourselves to be overtaken by our competitors – Germany, Spain, the Netherlands too. Brazil’s exports to the UK are now more than double Mexico’s. These are missed opportunities we should not be willing to accept.” His trip will see new targets set for bilateral trade and the creation of a top-level forum of businessmen from both countries. “And this isn’t just about trade. There is a great deal we can learn from each other in order to generate lasting prosperity for our nations. During the recent economic crisis, for example, Mexican banks were better capitalised than their British counterparts. Having learnt from the Tequila Crisis of the 1990s, Mexico demonstrated great resilience in the face of global recession. As we look to reform our banking sector at home, there are important parallels we can draw. Clegg will also meet US vice-president Joe Biden in Washington on Wednesday. International trade Nick Clegg Mexico University funding Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Uncertainty over upheaval in Middle East prompts deputy prime minister to head delegation of businesses and universities Nick Clegg is to push for stronger ties with Latin America as officials said events in the Middle East have made the region an unpredictable partner for the UK. The deputy prime minister will lead a delegation of British businessmen and the vice-chancellors of six universities to Mexico as he seeks to win international business for the UK’s university sector. Mexico is the world’s 14th largest economy but officials believe it will move up to seventh place before the end of the decade. Clegg is this week taking the lead in what has been described by officials as a “year-long charm offensive” and is visiting Mexico where he will address the country’s senate in Spanish. Diplomats said he will be the first UK politician to address the senate, despite not being a head of state, and will meet Mexican president Felipe Calderón. Clegg will extol the virtues of UK industries to Latin America and will promote the UK’s education sector, the funding of which dented his standing so badly when he went back on a pre-election promise not to raise university fees. The government believes its education industry is a British success story and hopes to promote it as one that should set up satellite operations abroad in countries such as Mexico. Clegg will be accompanied by the vice-chancellor of the university in his Sheffield constituency, as well as ones from Aberdeen, Strathclyde and Southampton. The universities minister, David Willetts, and foreign office minister, Jeremy Browne, will also go on the trip. Clegg leaves the UK for Latin America after his last attempt at making the trip was cancelled to enable him to stay and vote through the government’s plans for a referendum on the alternative vote. Foreign office officials have been trying to get him to go abroad, saying there is international interest in the coalition that was formed in the UK last May. There is also a debate within the Foreign Office over the strategic direction the UK should take in the light of the uprisings in the Middle East, with question marks raised about whether Britain can continue to rely on the region for trade. An official from the government’s trade promotion body, UK Trade & Investment, said: “One or two of our traditional markets are proving a tad more difficult so if we could get more from Latin America, [that would help].”This year William Hague will open more embassies in Latin America, and there will be an emphasis on “political economy” as the UK seeks to capitalise on its standing in Mexico where officials say it is respected for its role in international affairs. Mexico is said to have looked to the UK for diplomatic guidance during the negotiations surrounding the situation in Libya, as well as have an interest in how British politics works. Mexican politicians regularly watch prime minister’s questions. Writing in Mexican daily newspaper, Reforma, Clegg said: “Mexico and the UK are open societies. That is why I am here, leading a delegation of UK government ministers and top businesspeople to Mexico City. Ours are like-minded nations: plural, democratic and internationalist in spirit. We recognise that, in an increasingly interconnected world, our prosperity and security depend ever more on one another. And, in that world, such an affinity is not to be squandered.” Clegg will say it is odd that while there were deep bilateral relationships in the 19th century, when the UK helped Mexico build its infrastructure, now the UK and Mexico don’t trade intensively – the UK is the fifth-largest trading nation in the world while Mexico is the “trade star” of Latin America. “The World Bank has declared Mexico the easiest Latin American nation within which to do business. In Europe, the OECD has said the same about the UK. Yet the UK makes up less than 1% of Mexico’s imports. We have allowed ourselves to be overtaken by our competitors – Germany, Spain, the Netherlands too. Brazil’s exports to the UK are now more than double Mexico’s. These are missed opportunities we should not be willing to accept.” His trip will see new targets set for bilateral trade and the creation of a top-level forum of businessmen from both countries. “And this isn’t just about trade. There is a great deal we can learn from each other in order to generate lasting prosperity for our nations. During the recent economic crisis, for example, Mexican banks were better capitalised than their British counterparts. Having learnt from the Tequila Crisis of the 1990s, Mexico demonstrated great resilience in the face of global recession. As we look to reform our banking sector at home, there are important parallels we can draw. Clegg will also meet US vice-president Joe Biden in Washington on Wednesday. International trade Nick Clegg Mexico University funding Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …UK Uncut activists say Met promised to show Fortnum & Mason protesters to safety – and then arrested them Campaigners for the tax-avoidance protest group UK Uncut have claimed senior police officers “tricked” them into a mass arrest after a peaceful protest inside Fortnum & Mason’s in London on Saturday. Activists say they were given repeated assurances by a chief inspector from the Metropolitan police that they would be shown to safety after the protest, which she described as non-violent and sensible. However, when protesters left the luxury Piccadilly store on police instruction, they were kettled, handcuffed and taken into custody. Their claims are backed up by footage, obtained by the Guardian , showing that, rather than being asked to leave, the protesters inside the luxury food retailer were told they were being kept inside for their own safety. In the video, shot by observers for the legal volunteer group Green & Black Cross, a police officer can be seen telling protesters they would be directed towards “the safest parts” once they had left the building. In all, 201 arrests were made during protests in London on Saturday, at which shops, banks and hotels were attacked by demonstrators who had broken away from the main, union-organised march down Whitehall to Hyde Park. A total of 149 people have been charged with offences, including 138 charged with aggravated trespass in connection with the Fortnum & Mason protest. The video also shows the officer agreeing with protesters that a breach of the peace had occurred outside the store, but not inside, and that Uncut protesters were being held inside so they did not become “wrapped up” in that disorder. “As people leave, they’re going to be asked to go left,” she can be heard telling protesters. “They’re just going into a safe environment because there’s some disorder [outside] … so we’re trying to keep it sterile, safe, so people can get away to the tube station. “People here are non-violent. It’s sensible – we don’t want them getting involved in stuff that makes it difficult for them,” adds the police officer in the footage. Another officer also assured the protesters no one would be kettled if they left the building. A spokesman for the Metropolitan police said it would be inappropriate to discuss the matter while proceedings are active. One Uncut activist, Jack Winstanley, who was held in a cell in Plaistow for 17 hours, said: “I feel totally betrayed by the police. They communicated the message fairly clear that we’d be released. And our protest had been totally peaceful. We then walked out into a kettle with police with riot helmets on. Not only could we not get home, we got arrested one by one.” Winstanley, a 26-year-old graphic designer from Brighton, said the Fortnum protest had been just like other UK Uncut protests. “It was creative and fun and exciting. There was a bit of cheering [and] whooping when people put up banners, and then things settled down and people were reading books and chatting and some people were talking to the staff about why we were there.” Several of those arrested said they had clothes and phones removed to be used as evidence. Another Uncut activist, who was arrested for 20 hours and preferred to be known only as Jim, said: “There was this policewoman, and she spoke to the legal observers and said that all we had to do is turn left and we’d be free to go. “But when we got out, they began arresting us. People in the crowd told a second female officer: ‘You’ve lied to us. You said we could leave and now you’re arresting everyone.’ She replied: ‘Yes, you’re free to leave – to the police station. You’re going to be arrested.’” “Because we were at a peaceful protest, which had been the same as all UK Uncut actions to date, it really shocked me that they would arrest all 150 protesters. I feel tricked. Perhaps I shouldn’t expect the police to tell me the truth,” he said. Also in the video is a 24-year-old female legal observer Jules Martin, who says customers in Fortnum & Mason are able to go about their business. Afterwards, she said: “The protesters never interfered with customers who wanted to browse. According to my notes, the cafe at the back was still open with waiters still moving about until after 5pm.” UK Uncut London Protest Police Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Detectives checking dental records after recovering human remains from field in Oxfordshire Detectives investigating the murder of Sian O’Callaghan are hoping to identify a second body found as part of the inquiry. They are checking dental records to find a match with remains of a young woman found in a farmer’s field in Oxfordshire. If the records do not help, officers will try to obtain a sample of DNA from the bones, a process that could take several weeks. Meanwhile, taxi driver Chris Halliwell remains behind bars on remand after appearing before Swindon magistrates charged with O’Callaghan’s murder. Halliwell faced an angry crowd inside and outside court that shouted insults and threats. Just before the hearing, the venue was switched to different courtroom so that Halliwell could be held in a dock with a roof on it, amid concern that missiles could be thrown. A packed public gallery was warned not to disrupt the hearing by the chair of the bench, Angus MacPherson. But as Halliwell was led from the dock, insults were hurled at him and one person shouted: “If we ever get hold of you we will kill you.” Outside, about 100 people had gathered. One man shouted: “Judge, give him bail. We will look after him.” Another yelled: “There is £150,000 on your head.” As the police van containing Halliwell was driven away, five or six onlookers banged on the side of the vehicle and chased it down the street. Halliwell, 47, wore a dark suit and striped shirt for his three-minute appearance. He spoke only to confirm his name, address, age and the identity of his lawyer. The clerk of the court said Halliwell was charged with murdering O’Callaghan between 18 and 25 March. He clasped his hands in front of him as the court head that a routine bail hearing will take place on Wednesday. O’Callaghan’s father, Mick O’Callaghan, later paid tribute to a “bright, bubbly, caring and friendly” daughter. Speaking in public for the first time since her body was found near a roadside in Oxfordshire, he described the family’s pain as “raw and overwhelming”. Sitting with Sian’s older brother, Liam, he said he was speaking for the whole family, including his wife Elaine and Sian’s partner, Kevin Reape. “As a family we wanted to express a few words about our beautiful daughter, a wonderful sister to Liam, Lora and Aiden and loving girlfriend to Kevin,” he said. “Sian was a bubbly, friendly, caring and loving girl. She was instantly likable, beautiful and considerate. “Although our pain at this time is raw and overwhelming, our memories of Sian will be a comfort to us in the dark days ahead.” He thanked the police, family, friends, the media and residents of Swindon for their help and support. “We would also like to thank the community in Swindon for their overwhelming kindness and support,” he said. “The sheer numbers of people involved in the searches, the vigils, flowers, lantern lighting and murals to Sian are incredibly touching and beautiful. Thank you.” O’Callaghan, a 22-year-old office administrator, disappeared in the early hours of Saturday 19 March after a night out with friends at the Suju nightclub in Swindon. Her body was found close to the Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire, about 12 miles east of the town, on Thursday. Police are appealing again for information from people who saw anything in the Ramsbury area, near Marlborough, 12 miles south of Swindon, from 3am on Saturday – the night she went missing. The work to identify the second body found near the village of Eastleach in Gloucestershire, 15 miles north of Swindon, is continuing. The remains, believed to be those of a woman aged between 23 and 30, were discovered on Saturday and police believe she disappeared between 2003 and 2005. A police source said officers are checking dental records to try to establish her identity. If they can find a match they may know the identity today. If not the process could be a much longer one. Crime Police Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …This is only the warm-up of things to come. From mcjoan of Dkos: The House will vote on the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization and the provision in it which would essentially codify vote fraud in organizing elections. A recap: last year the the National Mediation Board that oversees those elections ruled that the railroad and airline industries would have to end their practice of counting non-votes in these elections as no votes. Previously, any eligible worker who chose not to vote was automatically counted as a no. Which would be fraud in any other election in the United State. The industries, and most House Republicans, want the rule back. Fast forward. The anti-union push is building, in part fueled by one particular airline’s zeal to kill fairness in the workplace . I’m at the point that I will never fly Delta again. I think you should consider it too. Air travel is no day in the park and many people want to book a flight and be done with it, but there comes a time when even if it causes us more inconvenience, we have to do the right thing. TPM: In the next several days, the state-level fight between Democrats and Republicans over unions will go federal. House Republicans want to re-establish old rules which say that when aviation or rail workers don’t vote in unionization elections, they’re treated as having voted against unionization. And now on of the nation’s largest airlines is getting involved in the fight. The push is reflected in language in the House’s FAA re-authorization bill. In an earlier stage of the legislative fight, Democrats, joined by a few Republicans, nearly succeeded in getting the provision stripped. Now, sources say, a similar fight is likely to play out on the House floor, and anti-union employees at Delta Airlines are preparing to fly to Washington to join the fight. In a message to its members obtained by TPM, the group “No Way AFA” — a coalition of Delta employees who want to deliberalize union rights — frames the fight this way. (AFA is the Association of Flight Attendants, the flight attendants union.) “Title IX of the House FAA Reauthorization bill repeals the National Mediation Board’s 2010 elections rule change, which permits a minority of employees at airlines and railroads to determine whether or not the majority will be represented by unions,” the message reads. “[I]t is anticipated that an amendment will be offered on the House floor to strike these provisions from the bill and allow the NMB’s modified rule to stay in place.” According to the note, “Delta strongly supports the bill” as currently written. Members are encouraged to participate in a fly-in to Washington, D.C., to lobby their congressmen, for which “positive space travel” — free travel for airline employees — is permitted. A Delta spokesperson said No Way AFA operates separately from the company itself, but that the company “allow[s] employees to travel positive space to D.C. when supporting legislative efforts that the company supports.” By contrast, Delta policy requires employees to fly standby for leisure and personal travel, suggesting that the “positive space” standard for the fly-in could squeeze out seating space for regular travelers. How many times have you been booked on a flight only to hear these dreaded words while waiting to board the plane? “This flight is over-booked.” In this case your seats are probably going to anti-union Delta workers . If we apply the standard that these union busters want to use, namely that if you, as a worker fail to vote, it now counts as a “no” then Rep’s like Rep. Mica would not have been elected. Brian Beutler explains: Under the current system, a simple majority of those voting wins, just like in, say, the House of Representatives. If Republicans get their way, those rules will change, and workers who don’t vote will be tallied as having voted “no.” To illustrate the unfairness of that structure, the Communication Workers of America will circulate a new report on the Hill Monday, making the point that none of the recently-elected members of Congress would have won if their constituents who didn’t vote at all had been counted as votes against them. “[L]et’s take a look at what would happen to Rep. John Mica (R-FL), the Chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and the lead driver behind the insertion of the NMB elections provision into the larger FAA Reauthorization bill,” their report reads. Rep. Mica received support from 69% of the voters in his district who cast a ballot in his successful 2010 re-election campaign, amounting to slightly over 185,000 actual votes tallied for him. However, if you add the over 83,000 voters who voted against Rep. Mica to 312,000 eligible voters who did not participate, then Rep. Mica would only muster 32% of the overall total – falling far short of the majority needed for election. Rep. Mica would lose handily to the 68% of “voters” who chose his opponent or were non-participating voters whose absence was counted as a vote for the alternative. This is a cute way to look at the debate, but it’s also the way several Republicans see things . We are in a long battle that’s not going to end until Tea Party and extreme right-wing legislators are voted out of office. Wisconsin was only the beginning. I know propaganda plays a huge part in the uninformed stances taken by many American voters who are too busy to pay attention like we do, but with every vote they only secure the destruction of their own future.
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